FACULTY STORIES

Academic excellence brings honors to two Law School faculty

Professor Irus Braverman

Two members of the University at Buffalo School of Law faculty have been chosen for University-wide awards that honor excellence in research.

Professor Irus Braverman will receive the Exceptional Scholar Award for Sustained Achievement, and Associate Professor Samantha Barbas will be given the Exceptional Scholar Award for Young Investigators. They were nominated by interim Dean James A. Gardner, vetted by a University-wide faculty committee, and chosen for the honors by University Provost Charles F. Zukoski and President Satish K. Tripathi.

Both honors will be conferred in the fall during UB’s Celebration of Academic Excellence.

“We feel fortunate to have such outstanding researchers in our Law School and are delighted that they are receiving the recognition they so richly deserve,” says Interim Dean Gardner.

The Exceptional Scholar Award for Sustained Achievement recognizes “outstanding professional achievement that has been focused on a particular body of work over a number of years. This award was created to recognize an unprecedented accomplishment in a senior scholar's career, distinguishing a body of work of enduring importance that has gone beyond the norm in a particular field of study.”

Braverman, who joined the Law School faculty as an associate professor in 2007, is also an adjunct professor of geography at UB. Her major research interests lie in the interdisciplinary study of law, geography, anthropology, and science and technology studies. She has written extensively about legal issues involving animals and nature conservation, including the books Zooland: The Institution of Captivity (Stanford University Press, 2012) and Wild Life: The Institution of Nature (Stanford University Press, 2015). This work has been supported by fellowships from Cornell University’s Society for the Humanities and the American Council for Learned Societies (ACLS). Braverman’s latest edited volume, Animals, Biopolitics, Law: Lively Legalities (Routledge, 2016), brings together anthropologists, geographers, and legal scholars to contemplate the possibilities of “more-than-human” law. She is currently writing about coral conservation and about the application of gene editing technologies to nonhumans.

The Exceptional Scholar Award for Young Investigators honors “a recent superior achievement of a scholar in his/her field of study. Such an achievement will have distinguished the recipient as an up-and-coming scholar, as well as earned the individual acclaim for his/her work.”

Associate Professor Samantha Barbas

Barbas, a Law School faculty member since 2011, focuses her scholarship on the intersection of law, culture, media and technology in the United States. Her recent research has explored the history of the law of privacy and defamation. Her book The Laws of Image: Privacy and Publicity in America, on the history of libel and privacy, was published by Stanford University Press in 2015. Another book, Newsworthy: The Supreme Court’s Battle Over Privacy and Freedom of the Press, will be published this year by Stanford University Press.

Among Law School faculty, previous winners of the Exceptional Scholar Award for Sustained Achievement have included SUNY Distinguished Service Professor David M. Engel; Robert J. Steinfeld, the Joseph W. Belluck and Laura L. Aswad Professor of Civil Justice; and Interim Dean Gardner, a SUNY Distinguished Professor and holder of the Bridget and Thomas Black Professorship.